Locomotive Portraits (ePub)
Imprint: Pen & Sword Transport
File Size: 67.7 MB (.epub)
ISBN: 9781473857803
Published: 8th July 2015
Other formats available - Buy the Hardback and get the eBook for free! | Price |
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Locomotive Portraits Hardback Add to Basket | £25.00 |
Whilst ever there have been railways there have been artists keen to paint them. Many famous names have included aspects of the railways in their paintings, including most notably Claude Monet and J M W Turner. This enthusiasm has been kept alive by the formation in the UK of the Guild of Railway Artists, of which there are over two hundred members including the author of this work. In recent years Jonathan Clay has had many requests to produce his own book of pictures and Locomotive Portraits is the result.
Jonathan discovered his own unique style by happy accident - in order to save time for his first railway event in 1999, he painted a series of locomotive pictures without backgrounds, intending to add the scenery later. However, they sold so well that they became the norm and his well-known series of Locomotive Portraits was born.
Containing over a 170 pages of stunning artwork, this book is a treat for rail and art lovers alike.
It is both an enjoyment for the eyes as well as a visual documentation in which to be fixed when it comes to painting or investigating.
José Manuél Rico Cortés (Mister JM) - Miniaturas JM
A miniature work of art.
Read the full Spnish review here.
This is not just a railway-themed art book, it also contains a short autobiography, and a chapter detailing 'How to paint a locomotive portrait'.
Ffestiniog Railway Magazine No. 233
Very good value and thoroughly recommended.
As featured in
Lancashire Life Magazine
This volume features an evocative selection of paintings from the respected transport artist Jonathan Clay. Each page features a single portrait with a story type caption.
The Railway Correspondence & Travel Society
Members should obtain a copy for the coffee table.
This book should appeal to railway enthusiasts and aficionados of railway art, as well as existing confirmed collectors of the artist's work. Warmly recommended.
Continental Modeller
This volume features an evocative selection of paintings from the respected transport artist Jonathan Clay.
The Railway Observer
Each locomotive portraits are accompanied by nice descriptions in the engaging, conversational tone. The captions say nothing about technique or the like but there is a fine opening chapter showing nine steps from first sketch to finished piece. The very first chapter offers an entertainingly written autobiography. Even the Acknowledgements are worth reading because there is nothing boilerplate about them
speedreaders.info
Railway art has a long and impressive lineage, for instance Turner and Monet, included some aspects of railways in their art. The tradition continues to this day, with the formation in the UK of the Guild of Railway Artists, which has over 200 members, including Jonathan Clay. Jonathan has responded to requests to produce a book of his artwork, and the results are very impressive.
Destructive Music
He stumbled upon the method of producing painting of locomotives without backgrounds due to the demands of time, and this method has proved very popular. He truly is a superb artist and the text for each painting is just right.
The large hardcover format and the high quality of the artwork reproductions is a credit to Jonathan and Pen & Sword. No digital format could ever do justice to this work in the same manner.
As featured in
Clitheroe Advertiser and Times
An outstanding record of this well known artists work.Over 150 images,steam, diesel, narrow gauge, standard gauge and miniature, all reproduced in a large format with informative and accurate captions.Highly recommended, but buy the BOOK not the KIndle you need to hold and study this beautiful book!
Nigel Bird Books
About Jonathan Clay
Jonathan Clay has become one of the best known transport artists in the UK. He has produced over 1100 paintings and drawings, of which over 730 are of his well-known and widely-acclaimed ‘Locomotive Portraits’. His pictures now hang on homes, railway buildings, and museums all over the world. In the 1950s and 1960s, he was an enthusiastic train- and bus-spotter, and began to draw and paint seriously. In the mid 1970s he held exhibitions of his work in Lancashire, and even had a display of motor racing paintings on show at the Donington Park Racing car museum, in 1979.